Grant Peeples & Gurf Morlix will play a fine acoustic concert on Wednesday, October 16th, at 7:00 PM.

Folk/Roots artist Grant Peeples is known for his axe-sharp socio-political tunes as well as Roger Miller type humor and heart gigging ballads. Songwriting legend Bobby Braddock described him “like Prine, but with a Southern bent.” Music News Nashville called him “a guitar-slinging poet.”

Peeples tours have included performances at The Woody Guthrie Folk Festival in Okemah, OK, The Living Room in New York City, and The Triple Door in Seattle. His records, produced by Gurf Morlix (Lucinda Williams, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Robert Earl Keen), have topped Folk/Roots charts in the US and in Europe.

Roy Kasten of KDHX says that Morlix writes “with a flair for wit and mystery.” And of the album, "...it is acoustic country blues with flashes of electric lightining and crazy carnival organ when least expected." Bill Bentley of the Austin Chronicle says, “the man sings with such beautiful sadness…” Morlix is an Americana Music Association Award Winner and multiple nominee for Instrumentalist of the Year, and so fulfills the triple threat of Americana/Roots musicianship: soul-grabbing singing before a backdrop of unforgettable songwriting and expert instrumentation It all comes together like a charm at his live shows.

The Players...

Grant Peeples:
“I’m a vegetarian that watches NASCAR, a tree-hugger that keeps a gununder the seat.”–Grant Peeples
Dubbed a “guitar-slinging poet” by Music News Nashville.
A voice No Depression says “sounds like a ’57 Chevy with glass mufflers…”
Songs that Routes & Branches deemed “smart, strong lyrics that mean something, and say it in a way that you haven’t heard before.”
This finger-in-your-eye styled songwriter and 7th generation Floridian is a former expatriate. He spent 11 years on a tiny island off the coast of Nicaragua, where he installed the island’s first flushing toilet. He returned in 2006 to a very different homeland. Much of his songwriting is a response to what he found when he returned.

His latest release, Prior Convictions (2012) was produced by legendary roots icon Gurf Morlix. John Conquest of 3rd Coast Music reviewed the record: “Unusually literate, unusually honest…he’s the only songwriter I’ve ever called ruthless…”

His mother finds his songs…disturbing…

Gurf Morlix:
Tempting as it may be, don't just judge Gurf Morlix by the company he
keeps, even if it does provide a fine starting point: eminent musical
artists like Lucinda Williams, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Warren Zevon, Ian
McLagan, Patty Griffin, Robert Earl Keen, Michael Penn, Buddy Miller,
Mary Gauthier, Tom Russell, Jim Lauderdale and Slaid Cleaves, to name
but a few. Instead, listen to Last Exit to Happyland, his fifth solo
album, and understand why his blue-ribbon associations as a producer,
guitarist and multi-instrumentalist have led Morlix to a similar level
of excellence as a singer, songwriter and artist in his own right.

As critic Henry Cabot Beck notes on Amazon.com, "If anybody is still
looking for a candidate to replace Robbie Robertson in The Band, look
no further. Morlix can write, sing, produce, and play nearly every
instrument (mostly stringed) and has a bottomless (albeit muddy) range
of American musical idioms from which to draw." Through more than four
decades of professional music endeavors, Morlix has distinguished
himself with his innate musicality, exquisite taste, keen creative
instincts, and well-honed ear for not only songwriting but also the
elements that bring songs to their fullest fruition.

And now, on Last Exit to Happyland, "I've found my voice, and my
albums just keep getting better and better all the time," Morlix says.
"I'm really proud of these songs and this album."

The album is a showcase for Morlix's gifts as a musician and producer
as well as his finest moment yet as a writer and singer. He plays
everything on it but the drums, which are ably handled by Rick
Richards, who has manned the kit on many of Morlix's productions in
recent years. Icing the cake are Patty Griffin, Barbara K (of Timbuk 3
fame) and rising Texas singing sensation Ruthie Foster, who contribute
harmony vocals to a number of tracks. As with all that Morlix has
produced and played over the years, every note and creative touch
ultimately serves the songs. And his trademark grit, soulfulness and
authenticity suffuse the album, representing the "muddy," as Morlix
calls the junction where the varied strains of American roots music
meet and mingle, at its truest and finest.

Last Exit to Happyland is peopled with characters "headed to reckoning
day," as Morlix sings in the propulsive opener, "One More Second." The
swampy bomp of "Walkin' to New Orleans" finds a Crescent City resident
heading home into the deadly wind and rain of Hurricane Katrina, while
the haunting country-blues "Crossroads" reveals new wrinkles in Robert
Johnson's fateful meeting with the devil. Whether it's longtime lovers
at the "End of the Line," a traveler on a "Hard Road" or an outcast
who laments "I Got Nothin'," Morlix captures their emotional essence.

"Drums From New Orleans" takes listeners back to the radio signals
that inspired Morlix as a youngster, and he pays tribute to his late
friend and musical cohort Blaze Foley — also the subject of Williams'
"Drunken Angel" — on "Music You Mighta Made," which echoes Foley's
musical and songwriting style. On "She's a River," a beloved woman
becomes a wonder of nature. And the stark "Voice of Midnight" examines
life's final moments in a perfect grace note to a collection of songs
that compares favorably to any other created by the many artists who
have called on Morlix to help them make the most of the their music.

Prior to embarking on his own career, Morlix was likely best-known for
his 11-year creative partnership with Lucinda Williams as her
guitarist, band leader and backing vocalist as well as the producer of
two of her classic, critically-acclaimed albums: her 1988 breakthrough
Lucinda Williams and 1992's Sweet Old World. His work with Williams
led him to produce multiple recordings for Hubbard (four albums),
Cleaves (three albums and an EP with a fourth album soon to be
released) and two albums each with Keen and Gauthier, as well as discs
by Russell, McLagan, Butch Hancock, Hot Club of Cowtown, The Setters
(Alejandro Escovedo, Michael Hall and Walter Salas-Humara) and others.

Music captured Morlix's imagination from a very early age growing up
in Buffalo, New York, as he soaked up the many sounds to be found on
the airwaves. On hearing the Everly Brothers singing "Cathy's Clown"
for the first time, Morlix found his mission in life. "It was like,
'That's what I want to do!' It was earth-shattering music to me,
really amazing." After seeing the Beatles make their U.S. debut on
"The Ed Sullivan Show," his fate was sealed.

Starting out on bass and moving to guitar, Morlix was playing
professionally by his mid-teens (his longtime friend Peter Case made
his stage debut between sets by Morlix's band). Mastering new sounds
and new instruments became a lifelong pursuit when he heard the steel
guitar on Bob Dylan's "Lay Lady Lay" — he got himself one and then
joined a country band to learn how to play it. The band members turned
him on to country icons like Hank Williams and Lefty Frizzell, who
remain indelible influences. By the time Morlix finished high school
and struck out to play music in such warmer climes as, first, Key
West, and then in 1975, Austin, Texas, he had a rich musical
vocabulary that included rock, country, blues, folk and R&B, and a
growing yen to create music in a place where all of them met and
intermingled.

During his first stint in Texas, dividing his time between Austin and
Houston, Morlix played in a band with kindred souls Buddy and Julie
Miller, toured with Stevenson (known for his hits "My Maria" and
"Shambala"), worked with Texas cult legend Foley, and made his
recorded debut playing bass on Eric Taylor's Shameless Love album. In
1981, he moved to Los Angeles and fell in with neo-country and roots
artists like Dwight Yoakam, Lauderdale and the Millers, and also
finally met Williams, who had played the same circuit as Morlix in
Texas. He also toured with Zevon and Penn (and can be heard playing
steel guitar on Penn's Free for All album), briefly reunited with Case
as a member of The Plimsouls (and also sang on Case's solo debut), and
recorded four tracks with Jerry Lee Lewis for the Great Balls of Fire
soundtrack album.

In 1991 Morlix returned to Texas, settling into a house outside Austin
where he installed his Rootball studio at the end of the 1990s. In
addition to offering his production clients a comfortable place to
make their records, having the home studio led Morlix to start making
albums of his own.

He'd been writing songs for years, and holding his creations to the
same high standards set by the songs of those he worked with. As the
'90s came to a close he finally felt he had a strong enough set of
songs to strike out on his own. "I had the studio, so everybody
started asking me: Well, when are you going to make a record? Then
Buddy Miller made his first record [on which Morlix played guitar,
bass, sang and co-wrote a song], so I made one," he explains. In
between sessions at Rootball with his clients on which he produces,
engineers, masters and plays a range of instruments, Morlix cut his
first solo release, Toad of Titicaca, in 2000. The Austin Chronicle
hailed it as "a fine solo debut," and noted music journalist John
Morthland greeted it as "an eclectic yet seamless set, full of
pleasures and surprises both large and small" on Amazon.com.

With his debut and each album to follow, critics and listeners who had
noted the quality and integrity of Morlix's work with other talents
greeted his emergence with enthusiasm. Fishin' in the Muddy in 2002
was dubbed "a romper stomper" by the Austin Chroncle, while All Music
Guide found it "hypnotic in its shambolic, loose-wound, grooving
glory." Morlix's love for gutbucket C&W and honky-tonk informed his
third release in 2004, Cut 'N Shoot, which All Music Guide praised as
"a solid country record, stripped to the rag and bone shop of the
heart, and full of broken love songs [with the] requisite irony,
humor, and a gritty, honest approach that is sorely missing from
almost all country records these days." Growing ever more secure with
stepping out front as a writer and singer, he released the "splendid,
moving collection" (Austin Chronicle) Diamonds To Dust in 2007, which
led critic Richard Skanse to observe on CD Baby.com that "Morlix
should henceforth be regarded as nothing less than one of the most
compelling and formidable songwriters in his adopted home state of
Texas, if not in all Americana music."

And now with Last Exit to Happyland, Morlix rightly feels he has come
into his own as an artist, songwriter and performer. "I'm really
enjoying writing songs, making my records, and going out and playing,"
he notes. His ever-expanding touring circuit has already taken him
across North America and to Europe and Japan.

Morlix will of course continue to produce and play with others, but
finally adding his own voice to the chorus of great American music is
a welcome (if not long overdue) move. For as Skanse rightly notes on
CD Baby, "more Morlix, as any Gurf connoisseur can tell you, can only
be one thing: cool."